Case Law[2023] ZASCA 76South Africa
Pretorius v Agricultural Research Council (250/22) [2023] ZASCA 76 (29 May 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
29 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Law of contract – lease of farm – agreement allowing renewal provided lessee not in default of its terms – purported renewal by lessee whilst in default of obligations – invalid – counterclaim for lost profits arising from sublease – unsustainable as purported renewal of agreement of no force or effect – lessee issuing cheque for arrear rental – payment stopped – claim on dishonoured cheque upheld.
Judgment
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## Pretorius v Agricultural Research Council (250/22) [2023] ZASCA 76 (29 May 2023)
Pretorius v Agricultural Research Council (250/22) [2023] ZASCA 76 (29 May 2023)
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sino date 29 May 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case No: 250/2022
In the matter between:
DANIEL
NEL PRETORIUS
APPELLANT
and
AGRICULTURAL
RESEARCH COUNCIL
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Pretorius v Agricultural Research
Council
(Case no 250/22)
[2023] ZASCA
76
(
29 May 2023
)
Coram:
SCHIPPERS, CARELSE, MABINDLA-BOQWANA,
GOOSEN and MOLEFE JJA
Heard:
18 May 2023
Delivered:
29 May 2023
Summary:
Law of contract – lease of farm – agreement allowing
renewal provided lessee not in default of its terms – purported
renewal by lessee whilst in default of obligations – invalid –
counterclaim for lost profits arising from sublease
–
unsustainable as purported renewal of agreement of no force or effect
– lessee issuing cheque for arrear rental –
payment
stopped – claim on dishonoured cheque upheld.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Louw J sitting as court of
first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Schippers
JA (Carelse, Mabindla-Boqwana, Goosen and Molefe JJA concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal against an order of the Gauteng Division
of the
High Court, Pretoria (the high court), directing the appellant, Mr
Daniel Nel Pretorius (the defendant), to pay the sum
of R439 300.92
together with interest and costs to the respondent, the Agricultural
Research Council (the plaintiff), in respect
of arrear amounts owing
under a lease agreement. The high court (Louw J) also dismissed the
defendant’s counterclaim for
payment of R4 860 000
for lost profits, with costs. The appeal is with its leave.
[2]
The basic facts are largely common ground and can be
briefly stated.
On 1 August 2001 the parties concluded a written lease agreement
in terms of which the plaintiff let a farm
known as Plot 103,
Kameeldrift, Pretoria (the property), to the defendant for a period
of nine years and 11 months, which commenced
on 1 August 2001,
terminating on 30 June 2011 (the initial agreement).
[3]
The initial agreement contained the following terms.
The defendant
would be invoiced for rental (R350 per hectare per year with an
annual escalation of 10% on the ground only) during
March of every
year, ending on 31 March. The rental invoice had to be paid by no
later than 31 May of each year. The defendant
was given an option to
renew the lease, subject to the express condition that the right of
renewal could not be exercised while
he was in breach or default of
any of the terms of the agreement.
[4]
At first the rental was paid annually in accordance with
the terms of
the initial agreement. However, that changed when the defendant made
arrangements with the plaintiff to make frequent
payments during the
course of the year, instead of paying an annual amount. The defendant
fell into arrears with his payment obligations
and on 13 October
2009, the outstanding balance owed to the plaintiff was R206 219.43.
Consequently, the defendant signed an acknowledgement
of debt (AOD)
on 2 November 2009, in terms of which he admitted that he was
indebted to the plaintiff in respect of municipal services
to the
property in the sum of R206 219.43. The defendant paid this amount in
instalments to the plaintiff.
[5]
Subsequently, the defendant again fell into arrears with
his payment
obligations under the initial agreement. On 15 October 2010 he signed
a second AOD in terms of which he acknowledged
his indebtedness to
the plaintiff in the amount of R203 043.95, in respect of municipal
charges (the second AOD). The defendant
undertook to pay this amount
by way of a minimum monthly instalment of R20 000 and to settle the
outstanding balance by 31 March
2011. The first monthly instalment
was payable by 25 November 2010 and each subsequent instalment had to
be paid on or before the
25
th
day of each succeeding
month, until the arrears and interest were paid.
[6]
On 25 November 2010, whilst in arrears with his obligations
under the
initial agreement, the defendant purported to exercise the option to
renew that agreement in writing. The plaintiff therefore
contended
that the purported renewal was of no force and effect, and that the
initial agreement came to an end by the effluxion
of time on 30 June
2011.
[7]
After 30 June 2011, the defendant continued to occupy
the property.
The plaintiff’s case was that this occupation was in terms of a
month-to-month agreement. The defendant denied
this. He claimed that
the initial agreement had been renewed and that he was entitled to
occupy the property until 31 May 2021.
[8]
On 28 March 2014 the plaintiff’s attorneys informed
the
defendant that the plaintiff had cancelled the lease agreement, gave
him notice to vacate the property by 30 July 2014, and
demanded
payment of arrear amounts arising from his lease of the property in
the sum of R439 300.92. The defendant’s response
to the
termination notice was that it was a repudiation of the agreement,
which was not accepted, and he tendered payment of the
arrears. On 20
June 2014 the defendant issued the plaintiff with a cheque for the
arrears in the sum of R439 300.92. When
the plaintiff presented
the cheque for payment, it was dishonoured – the defendant had
stopped payment.
[9]
The plaintiff then sued the defendant in the high court
for payment
of arrear rental in the amount of R502 707.84, founded on an alleged
month-to-month lease agreement; alternatively,
for payment of R439
300.92 based on the dishonoured cheque. The defendant brought a
counterclaim for payment of R4 860 000
for lost profits,
allegedly arising from an oral agreement which he had entered into on
2 July 2012, to sublease the property
to a third party until 31
May 2021. The plaintiff raised a special plea of prescription to the
defendant’s counterclaim,
namely that it was served more than
three years after the date on which the claim arose.
[10]
The high court decided the issue of prescription
in limine
, on
the assumption that the defendant had exercised his right to renew
the lease in accordance with the terms of the initial agreement.
The
plea of prescription was upheld. The court found that prescription
began to run on 28 March 2014, ie the date on which the
plaintiff
allegedly repudiated the agreement, and that a period of more than
three years had elapsed before the defendant’s
counterclaim was
served on the plaintiff on 6 July 2017. Consequently, the
counterclaim was dismissed with costs. The high court
dismissed the
plaintiff’s claim for arrear rental based on a month-to-month
agreement. The alternative claim for payment
of R439 300.92,
founded on the dishonoured cheque, succeeded.
[11]
The main issue on appeal is the validity of the defendant’s
purported
renewal of the initial agreement on 25 November 2010. As
already stated, he was precluded from exercising the option to renew
the
lease if he was in breach or default of any of its terms. When
the defendant ostensibly exercised that right, he was in arrears
with
his payment obligations under the initial agreement. He signed the
second AOD in which he accepted that he owed the plaintiff
R203 043.95, being arrears in respect of municipal charges.
[12]
Counsel for the defendant however argued that the option was validly
exercised,
because he ‘was not in breach of the second AOD’.
That AOD, so it was argued, ‘was a
pactum non petendo
in
the form of a waiver of the plaintiff’s right to cancel the
agreement’, and ‘an alteration of the defendant’s
payment obligations’, which ‘constituted an amendment of
the initial agreement’. Then it was submitted that the
AOD was
‘not merely a concession by the plaintiff to the defendant, but
a waiver that was contractual in form’.
[13]
The
argument is misconceived. First, a defence of waiver must be pleaded,
which the defendant failed to do.
[1]
What is more, the party relying on the waiver of a contractual right
bears the onus to allege and prove that the other party had
full
knowledge of that right when it allegedly abandoned it.
[2]
Clear proof of a waiver is required: it must be shown that the party
alleged to have waived not only acted with full knowledge
of its
rights, but that its conduct is irreconcilable with the continued
existence of such rights, or with the intention of enforcing
them.
[3]
The defendant neither alleged nor proved that the plaintiff had
waived any right under the initial agreement.
[14]
Secondly, the argument that the second AOD amended the initial
agreement is
directly at odds with clause 24.1 of the agreement. It
provided:
‘
24
Non-waiver
24.1
Neither party shall be regarded as having waived, or be precluded in
any way from exercising, any right
under or arising from this lease
by reason of such party having at any time granted any extension of
time for, or having shown
any indulgence to, the other party with
reference to any payment or performance hereunder, or having failed
to enforce, or delayed
in the enforcement of, any right of action
against the other party.’
[15]
Thus, the initial agreement was not altered in any way by the
execution of
the second AOD, which was nothing more than an
indulgence granted to the defendant. In any event, the agreement
contained a non-variation
clause, designed to prevent informal or
oral variations without a written agreement between the parties, and
which eliminates any
disagreement about whether any amendment to the
initial agreement was concluded. Clause 23.1 provided that the lease
‘constitutes
the entire agreement between the parties’.
Clause 23.3 stated:
‘
No variation or
consensual cancellation of this agreement shall be of any force or
effect unless reduced to writing and signed by
both parties.’
A clause such as this,
described as ‘the doctrine that contracting parties may validly
agree in writing to an enumeration
of their rights, duties and powers
in relation to the subject-matter of a contract, which they may alter
only by again resorting
to writing’,
[4]
remains enforceable.
[5]
[16]
The second AOD was the clearest admission by the defendant: (i) that
he was
in default of his obligations under the initial agreement;
(ii) as to how the default arose; and (iii) of the steps taken to
cure
the default. The high court thus correctly found that the
defendant was in default of his obligations under the initial
agreement
when he purported to exercise the option to extend the
lease.
[17]
This finding has four consequences. The first is that on 2 July 2012,
the defendant
could not have entered into any sublease of the
property until 31 May 2021, for the simple reason that he had no
right to do so:
the main lease had not been extended. The second is
that the foundation of the defendant’s counterclaim has been
destroyed.
The third is that the issue of prescription does not
arise, and no more need be said about it. And the fourth is that the
cheque
which the defendant issued to the plaintiff for payment of
arrear amounts, could never have been subject to the condition he
purportedly
imposed – that the plaintiff should honour the
terms of the initial agreement, which had expired on 30 June 2011 and
was
not validly renewed.
[18]
What
remains is the plaintiff’s alternative claim for payment of
R439 300.92, based on the dishonoured cheque. The defence
that
the cheque was issued subject to the condition that the plaintiff
honours the terms of the lease agreement, and that it should
not
persist with its cancellation of the defendant’s lease and
vacation of the property on 30 July 2014, falls away. The
defendant’s
counsel, relying on
Saambou-Nasionale
Bouvereniging
,
[6]
submitted that the claim based on the dishonoured cheque could not
succeed because there was no underlying agreement that justified
its
issue.
[19]
The submission however is unsustainable on the evidence and the law.
As in
the case of waiver, the defendant did not plead that there was
no reasonable cause to issue the cheque. On the contrary, he
testified
that as at 28 March 2014, his account with the plaintiff
was in debit in the sum of R439 300.92. He said that he ‘was
in arrears in an amount of R439 000 in terms of the extended lease
agreement’, and that he had never denied that he owed
the
plaintiff money.
[20]
The
defendant’s reliance on
Saambou-Nasionale
Bouvereniging
is misplaced. It is authority for the proposition that reasonable
cause for the issue of a cheque exists where the drawer and the
payee
agree as to what the proceeds of the cheque are to be used for. By
this agreement the bond between the negotiable instrument
contract
and the underlying relationship is established.
[7]
That is the case here: the parties agreed that the cheque for R439
300.92 was in settlement of the defendant’s indebtedness
arising from his lease of the property. It matters not that the
plaintiff did not establish that his continued occupation was in
terms of a month-to-month lease: the fact is that the defendant
continued to lease the property after the initial agreement had
come
to an end, and he became indebted to the plaintiff in the amount of
R439 300.92 under that lease.
[21]
The
plaintiff established the requisites for its claim on the cheque in
the sum of R439 300.92. A cheque is a bill payable on demand,
which
can be presented for payment on any date within a reasonable time
after its issue.
[8]
The
plaintiff was the legal holder of the cheque signed by the defendant
as drawer, as a result of which he incurred personal liability
on the
cheque.
[9]
It was presented for
payment but dishonoured by non-payment. Notice of dishonour is
dispensed with because the defendant countermanded
payment.
[10]
[22]
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with costs, including the
costs of two
counsel.
__________________
A SCHIPPERS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant:
A
B Rossouw SC and A P J Bouwer
Instructed
by:
MacRobert
Attorneys, Pretoria
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
Instructed
by:
B
L Manentsa and Z Ngakane
Adams
& Adams, Pretoria
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Montesse
Township and Investment Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Another v Gouws
NO, and Another
[1965] 4 All SA 285
(A);
1965 (4) SA 373
(A) at 381B-C.
[2]
Feinstein
v Niggli and Another
[1981] 2 All SA 92
(A);
1981 (2) SA 684
(A) at 698F;
Borstlap
v Spangenberg en Andere
[1974] 4 All SA 25
(A);
1974 (3) SA 695
(A) at 704E-H.
[3]
Borstlap
fn 2 at 704E-H;
Road
Accident Fund v Mothupi
[2000] 3 All SA 181
(A);
2000 (4) SA 38
(SCA) para 19.
[4]
Brisley
v Drotsky
2002 (4) SA 1
(SCA) para 89 per Cameron JA;
SA
Sentrale Ko-Op Graanmaatskappy Bpk v Shifren en Andere
1964 (4) SA 760
(A) at 767A-B.
[5]
G B Bradfield
Christie’s
Law of Contract in South Africa
7 ed (2016) at 518.
[6]
Saambou-Nasionale
Bouvereniging v Friedman
1979 (3) SA 978 (A).
[7]
Saambou-Nasionale
Bouvereniging
fn 6 at 992G-H.
[8]
Navidas
(Pty) Ltd v Essop; Metha v Essop
[1994] ZASCA 84
;
1994
(4) SA 141
(A) at 152E. Section 43(2)
(b)
of the Bills of Exchange Act 34 of 1964 provides:
‘
A
bill is duly presented for payment if it is presented in accordance
with the following rules, namely-
.
. .
(b)
if
the bill is payable on demand, presentment must, subject to the
provisions of this Act, be made within a reasonable time, within
the
meaning of subsection (3), after its issue, in order to render the
drawer liable, and within such a reasonable time after
its
endorsement, in order to render the indorser liable.’
[9]
Marshall
and Another v Bull Quip (Pty) Ltd
[1983] 1 All SA 96
(A);
1983 (1) SA 23
(A) at 28A.
[10]
Braz v
Afonso and Another
[1997] ZASCA 81
;
[1997] 4 All SA 428
(SCA);
1998 (1) SA 573
(SCA) at 579I-580C.
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